Voatz and Clear Ballot Announce Partnership to Explore Blockchain Technology for Remote Voting

After  more than a year of investigation and collaboration, two Boston-based companies, Voatz, Inc. and Clear Ballot Group, Inc. are announcing their partnership to accelerate the introduction of secure, accessible remote voting in elections. Voatz brings an open source blockchain platform designed for secure, high volume remote voting on smartphones and tablets. It has been independently evaluated for security and has already been piloted successfully in several private and municipal elections in 2016.  Clear Ballot, a voting system company, has provided the Voatz team with election industry knowledge, market requirements and a rich sample election dataset that allows their engineers to understand and build support for the complexities and scale of real elections.

Key portions of the user interface and the Voatz backend technology will be demonstrated at the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) and the National Association of State Election Directors (NASED) meetings held at the JW Marriott in Washington, D.C. from February 15-17, 2017.

Nimit Sawhney, Co-Founder and CEO of Voatz said, “Both companies recognize that there are a number of questions that must be adequately addressed before a large-scale deployment of remote voting is possible.  These include end-to-end verification, voter anonymity, authentication, security, cost, ease of deployment, scalability, user experience and most importantly – public trust.  I strongly believe that this partnership puts us in a great position to address these challenges to enable millions of citizens to benefit from the convenience and security offered by this new technology paradigm.”

Larry Moore, Founder and CEO of Clear Ballot said, “Innovation in elections takes too long and there are too many barriers to entry in this market. I am convinced that the fastest way to accelerate election innovation is for voting system companies, like Clear Ballot, to help promising new technology companies with technical support, election industry knowledge, regulatory requirements and market access.  An example is that people want to vote on their smartphone. Two of the challenges to remote voting have been security and accessibility. Blockchain technology coupled with smartphones and tablets have the potential to solve these problems, but this pairing must be rigorously assessed before widespread deployment.  With this partnership, we break down the barriers to entry and begin the innovation cycle to address the need for secure, accessible, remote voting.”

Imagine the convenience to registered voters who receive a sample ballot on their smartphone and make their selections using the familiar accessible features of an app on their smartphone. Then, when the polls open, they bring their smartphone with their pre-marked ballot to the polling location. By building the app on the blockchain architecture, it is not a great leap to imagine the voter not having to make the trip at all.

Working together, Voatz and Clear Ballot are tackling the complex problem of secure, accessible remote voting.

Press Release

Voatz at HUBWeek 2016!

Team Voatz recently participated in Boston’s HUBWeek, where we spread the word on our cutting-edge mobile voting software. Here are some highlights for those of you who missed out on last week’s festivities:

On Thursday 9/29, co-founder and CEO Nimit Sawhney presented at HUBWeek’s The Hype and Promise of Blockchain event at the Boston Federal Reserve. For Voatz, the advent of blockchain is all promise and no hype. Nimit’s presentation covered how the Voatz software uses blockchain technology to protect and secure votes. In short, blockchain is a continuously growing list of data,  in which each individual piece of information is linked to the preceding and subsequent “block” of data. This makes it virtually impossible to tamper with the data already written to a blockchain. As such, the Voatz software is highly secure, able to function in the presence of threats and, for all intents and purposes, is tamper resistant.

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Nimit Sawhney, Voatz Co-founder and CEO, presenting at HUBWeek’s “The Hype and Promise of Blockchain” event at the Boston Federal Reserve.

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Olivia Jeffers of Compassionate Technologies wrote about Nimit’s talk in her weekly newsletter:

“ . . . [B]lockchain goes beyond banking, it also plays a potentially powerful role in voting. Nimit Sawhney, co-founded Voatz, a way to vote securely using blockchain, biometrics, and wearables. If it were around today, you could vote from your smartphone in the upcoming November general election.

Given that voting isn’t easy in the United States, and only roughly half of eligible Americans voted in the last general election, being able to vote from your phone as easily as ordering an Uber would drastically change the face of elections. It would open a potential shift in voting power from older, rural populations to younger, city populations.”

A day after the event, Marquis Cabrera named Voatz one of the hottest and most innovative government tech startups” in a piece for the Huffington Post. Cabrera writes:

“Voatz enables citizens to vote in all kinds of elections or verified voting events via a secured smartphone. Past attempts at internet based voting have failed or not gone mainstream due to fundamental concerns around security, audit-ability, and voter anonymity. With Voatz, using multi-source real-time ID verification along with biometrics for security and the Blockchain for irrefutability, they are able to tackle all these challenges and significantly streamline the process of voting, bring more transparency and virtually eliminate fraud from the electoral voting process.”

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On Friday 9/30, Voatz participated in HUBWeek’s Demo Day at the Hynes Convention Center. Team Voatz (Simer, Isaac, Jennifer and Nimit) really enjoyed showcasing some of our latest features, answering questions and meeting Demo Day attendees who were interested in learning more about our exciting platform. If you missed us at Demo Day and are interested in collaborating with Voatz or beta-testing a pilot of our software, please contact us.

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Team Voatz explains the platform to HUBWeek Demo Day attendees at the Hynes Convention Center.

In addition to our HUBWeek events, Team Voatz attended the Faneuil Forum with Michael Sandel at Faneuil Hall on 9/26 and the Celebrate Boston event at WeWork South Station on 9/29. Harvard Professor Michael Sandel led a riveting discussion on the ethical implications of civic technology. An especially intriguing question Sandel posed is whether selfies should be permitted in the election booth. A sizable majority of audience members believed citizens should be free to publicize their vote if they so choose, and Team Voatz couldn’t agree more. At the Celebrate Boston party, we enjoyed meeting fellow civic-minded tech entrepreneurs over Asian noodles and coffee ice cream.

Our congratulations to the HUBWeek organizers on putting together such a fabulous festival. Thank you for all you do to inspire social change and celebrate innovation in the Boston area. We are already excited to see what HUBWeek 2017 has in store!

Yodlee’s Jeff Cain Talks About Voatz in the Silicon Valley Techflash

Jeff Cain, who directs the Envestnet | Yodlee Incubator, has had a ringside seat on innovation happening in the FinTech space.

What are some examples of non-fintech companies you have worked with?

In our first cohort, we had Voatz, which has a mobile voting application. Whether it’s voting for mayor or student body president or, hopefully eventually, national president, they help you do it on on your phone using our account verification technology, along with a bunch of biometrics, as one of their ways to prove that you are who you say you are.

You guys haven’t gotten involved in any of the virtual currency plays, right?

Within the incubator itself we haven’t. I’m personally super interested in the block chain, but most of those don’t leverage Yodlee data. Interestingly, Voatz, the voting company, actually records your vote on a blockchain. That makes sure it gets recorded, is immutable but also traceable. So one of the big problems people have with digital voting, the block chain effectively solves. It can be changed and you can actually track your vote.

Read the entire article here.

Voatz Wins the Audience Favorite Award at Mass Innovation Nights

The Voatz team was honored to receive the Audience Favorite award at the Mass Innovation Nights #84 at District Hall in Boston on March 8th 2016. Many thanks to the Mass Innovation Nights team and Microsoft for sponsoring the event and to District Hall for hosting us.

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The event brought together all facets of the civic tech ecosystem, from the big players like our sponsor Microsoft New England, to the grassroots participants like our featured startups, to the Massachusetts government. The night featured experts from Microsoft, Business Insurance & Benefits Services of MA, Resilient Coders and a representative from Emerson College. The government also announced a new initiative called GovNext. From their website: “GovNext is an intrapreneurial initiative that works with state agencies, municipalities, and constituents to deliver high-quality, modern technology to the public, driven by a shared mission with our partners. GovNext projects are low-cost and high-impact for the Commonwealth”.

Why Innovative Companies Are Using the Blockchain

Voatz is one of the startups featured in a two part series on the different types of blockchain startups. Part one discusses public blockchains. Part two will discuss private blockchains. Depending on who you ask, you might hear that the concept of the blockchain is as dramatic as the creation of the internet […]

Source: Why Innovative Companies Are Using The Blockchain

Voatz Is Selected to Present at Harvard’s #Tech4Democracy Showcase and Challenge

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The Voatz team is honored to be selected to participate in this event as part of HUBWeek.

The “showcase” features students and alumni from Harvard University and other area universities, as well as civic tech startups, entrepreneurs, and passionate citizens from across the Greater Boston area. Each presenter will demonstrate their idea through posters, prototypes, and other creative demonstrations.

The “challenge” features an esteemed panel of experts and leaders in the local civic tech movement to select the best idea/demonstration. In addition, everyone will be invited to vote for their favorite idea.

The #Tech4Democracy Showcase and Challenge was organized with support from:

Boston Civic Media Consortium
The City of Boston
The City of Cambridge Budget Office
The City of Somerville
The Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate
The Engagement Lab, Emerson College
FWD.us
Microsoft
The Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy, Harvard Kennedy School

Here’s some feedback we received on social media.